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Introduction

The warming of Earth’s surface and lower atmosphere due to the presence of certain gases in the air is known as the greenhouse effect. The gases involved are collectively termed greenhouse gases; the most significant of these are water vapor, carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide. The greenhouse effect is so named because it resembles the warming of a botanical greenhouse, but the comparison is not a perfect one. The glass walls of a greenhouse hold heat inside the building by trapping warmed air, preventing heat loss via convection. In contrast, greenhouse gases absorb radiation emitted from the Earth’s surface and direct it back to Earth, preventing radiant heat loss.

Natural Occurrence

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The greenhouse effect is a natural phenomenon that keeps Earth’s temperatures compatible with existing life-forms. As sunlight enters Earth’s atmosphere, some of it is reflected back into space. Most of it passes through the atmosphere, however, and heats Earth’s surface, which in turn emits some of this energy as infrared radiation. In the atmosphere, some infrared radiation escapes into space but most is absorbed by greenhouse gases and directed back toward Earth, where it further warms Earth’s surface and lower atmosphere. Without the warming due to the greenhouse effect, Earth’s surface temperature would be much colder than it is, with an average global temperature around 0 °F (–18 °C).

As a model of comparison, the planet Venus has a high concentration of carbon dioxide in its atmosphere. The carbon dioxide does not allow the heat from the planet to escape into space, thus causing an extreme greenhouse effect resulting in surface temperatures as high as 840 °F (450 °C). Mars’s atmosphere, on the other hand, contains low concentrations of carbon dioxide and so does not keep nearly as much of the planet’s thermal radiation from escaping. In other words, Mars has a weak greenhouse effect, making its surface much colder than it would be if it had a strong one. The average surface temperature of Mars is about –82 °F (–63 °C).

The most important greenhouse gas that naturally occurs in Earth’s atmosphere is water vapor. The amount of water vapor in the air, also called humidity, varies over different parts of Earth. For example, in areas with a cold climate, the water vapor content is lower, while tropical climates are often saturated with water vapor. Water vapor forms clouds, which also have the ability to affect Earth’s climate: clouds not only reflect sunlight away, which cools Earth, but also trap infrared radiation coming from Earth, which warms the air near the surface.

Most of the other greenhouse gases also occur naturally in the atmosphere. Carbon dioxide is released when volcanoes erupt, organic materials decay, and organisms exhale. Natural biological processes that occur in environments with low oxygen, such as in swamps, produce and release methane. Nitrous oxide is released from the oceans and from bacteria located within soil. These natural emissions of greenhouse gases are normally balanced by other natural processes that absorb these gases. For example, plants absorb carbon dioxide through the process of photosynthesis. The full complement of processes that release and absorb these gases is known as the carbon cycle.

The concentration of greenhouse gases affects how much heat the atmosphere retains. While the natural greenhouse effect makes life possible on Earth, the intensification of the effect due to human activities prevents the carbon cycle from naturally balancing itself and leads to global warming.

Human-Caused Effects

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In 1827 French mathematician Joseph Fourier first discovered that Earth’s atmosphere trapped heat much like a greenhouse. It was not until almost 70 years later, in 1896, that Swedish chemist and physicist Svante August Arrhenius first proposed that Earth’s average temperature would rise due to the additional carbon dioxide that was accumulating in the atmosphere since the large-scale burning of fossil fuels began with the Industrial Revolution. He hypothesized that as the growth of industry continued, carbon dioxide levels would continue to rise and cause an increase in Earth’s average surface air temperature. However, it would take another 50 years before scientists gathered concrete data to prove his theory.

Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.

Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.

In 1958 Charles David Keeling of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography consistently began to measure the levels of carbon dioxide at Mauna Loa in Hawaii. He charted a steady increase in these gas levels in Earth’s atmosphere.
Collected data show that the levels of carbon dioxide at present are 35 percent more than what they were before the Industrial Revolution began. This increase in atmospheric carbon dioxide levels is due to human-induced greenhouse gas emissions.

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About three-fourths of human-caused greenhouse gases come from the burning of fossil fuels, such as coal, oil, and natural gas. When fossil fuels are burned, carbon dioxide is emitted. Coal-burning power plants, automobiles, and factories are the biggest producers of this gas. Methane, an end product of industrial and agricultural processes and the decomposition of landfill wastes, has more than doubled in atmospheric concentration since the Industrial Revolution. Nitrous oxide emissions also increased due to industrial and agricultural activity. Halocarbons, such as the refrigerant perfluorocarbon (PFC), are produced through industrial activity. Although their atmospheric concentration is relatively low, by weight halocarbons trap up to thousands of times more heat than carbon dioxide.

The dramatic increase in greenhouse gases since the Industrial Revolution and their effect on global climate are of great concern to scientists and others. A report released by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change in 2014 projected a 4.7–8.6 °F (2.6–4.8 °C) rise in average surface temperature by 2100 if humans do not make major changes to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

Should present trends in the emissions of greenhouse gases, particularly of carbon dioxide, continue, climatic changes larger than any ever experienced by modern human civilization are expected. This could substantially alter natural and agricultural ecosystems, human and animal health, and climate patterns, increasing the incidence of droughts and major storms and disrupting living things and their interrelationships.

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